Digitizing Occupational Health Programs: The Dos and Do Nots – Webinar Recap

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Webinar recap with advice to help organizations successfully digitize their occupational health programs and avoid common pitfalls.

Digitizing occupational health (OH) programs is a powerful way to enhance efficiency, strengthen compliance, and promote employee well-being. However, simply adopting a new software solution isn’t enough. Without careful planning, organizations risk replicating outdated processes, introducing inefficiencies, and missing critical opportunities. 

In a recent webinar, Cority’s Jennifer Newland, Sr. Team Lead, Professional Services, and Ana Hernandez, Product Marketing Manager, shared practical advice to help organizations successfully digitize their OH programs and avoid common pitfalls. 

Here is a quick recap of the event with key points and a list of dos and don’ts when digitizing occupational health programs.

Why digitize occupational health?

Organizations still relying on paper-based or siloed systems face significant challenges, including manual tracking, inconsistent data, and poor visibility into workforce health. Therefore, to address those challenges, digitization can: 

  1. Improve compliance 
  2. Enhance reporting capabilities 
  3. Provide greater insights into employee health 
  4. Increase operational efficiency 

But achieving these benefits depends on more than just implementing software — it requires a strategic, thoughtful approach. 

Common Pitfalls in Digitizing OH Programs

Here are five major pitfalls that organizations often encounter: 

  1. Lifting & Shifting Legacy Workflows: Simply moving outdated processes into a new system limits the impact of digitization. 
  2. Underestimating Planning & Discovery: Skipping discovery can leave key business needs unaddressed and lead to rework. 
  3. Over Engineering the Solution: Excessively complex configurations can overwhelm users and hurt adoption. 
  4. Ignoring Change Management: Without proper training and support, even the best system may go unused. 
  5. Poor Data Strategy: Migrating bad data into a new system can perpetuate existing problems and cause confusion. 

Each pitfall comes with a corresponding best practice: analyze and simplify workflows before configuration, run thorough discovery sessions, start small and build thoughtfully, invest in change management, and clean and govern your data early. 

What Success Looks Like

A well-executed digitization strategy results in standardized data, real-time visibility into workforce health, and strong user engagement. Jennifer and Ana stressed that aligning configuration to business goals and planning for future scalability are critical to ensuring long-term success. 

Key Takeaways

Successfully digitizing occupational health programs require a proactive, strategic approach: 

  • Do involve end-users early and often. 
  • Do start with desired outcomes in mind. 
  • Do embrace phased rollouts when possible. 
  • Don’t assume technology alone will solve process problems. 
  • Don’t overwhelm users with unnecessary complexity. 
  • Don’t skip over change management. 

By following these best practices, organizations can unlock the full benefits of digitization and set the foundation for a healthier, more efficient workforce. 

Be sure to check out the webinar The Do’s and (definitely) Do Not Do’s When Digitizing your Occupational Health Program on demand now!  

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